Developmental heat sum influences recalcitrant seed traits in Aesculus hippocastanum across Europe


partly result from the use of different methodologies in the


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New Phytologist - 2004 - Daws - Developmental heat sum influences recalcitrant seed traits in Aesculus hippocastanum across


partly result from the use of different methodologies in the
two studies: in many cases Sun & Liang (2001) and the studies
cited in Walters (1998) determined the effect of desiccation
on excised embryos, whereas we desiccated whole seeds.
Nonetheless, this current study suggests that critical water
Fig. 4 (a,b) The relationship between germination percentage and 
embryonic axis water potential for seed lots of Aesculus 
hippocastanum
((a) Scotland, closed circle; Poland, open triangle; 
Greece, square, and (b): England, open circle; France, closed triangle), 
dried at 15
°C and 15% rh as whole seeds. Error bars are + 1 SE of 
the mean. Lines were fitted using the parameters derived from Probit 
analysis. The initial data points, before the upturn in germination for 
the Scottish and English seeds, were excluded from the fit. Median 
water potentials for axis viability loss were determined from the 
equations of the fitted lines. For clarity, maximum germination 
percentage for the Scottish seed lot is scaled to 100%.
14698137, 2004, 1, Downloaded from https://nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-8137.2004.01012.x by Uzbekistan Hinari NPL, Wiley Online Library on [02/06/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License


www.newphytologist.org © New Phytologist (2004) 162: 157–166
Research
164
potentials vary continuously in relation to developmental age
and post harvest handling rather than falling within discreet
categories. This is supported both by the finding that chilling
progressively increases the critical water potential for the onset
of desiccation stress in seeds of A. hippocastanum (Tompsett &
Pritchard, 1998) and the work of Dussert et al. (2000) who
reported that the critical water activity for viability loss of nine
Coffea species varied from 0.293 to 0.920.
We believe that this is the first report of a link between cli-
matic conditions across a continent, during development, and
the relative level of seed desiccation sensitivity within a single
species. An increase in desiccation tolerance during develop-
ment has been demonstrated previously, for a wide range of
recalcitrant species (as already described). Thus, our results,
coupled with this known effect, suggest that the increasing
desiccation tolerance of seeds that developed under warmer
conditions results from development progressing further
before seed shed. Finch-Savage & Blake (1994) reported
interannual variation in seed characteristics of Q. robur, such
as mass, moisture content and desiccation sensitivity. In years
where seeds were shed with a lower moisture content and with
a higher level of desiccation tolerance, this may have reflected
faster development before precocious shedding. Thus, in spe-
cies such as A. hippocastanum and Q. robur with recalcitrant
seeds and a long development period (c. 150 d), termination
of the growing season may result in the truncation of seed
development at different stages in different years as a result of
interseasonal variations in climate. Thus, the current findings
with A. hippocastanum suggest that the greater desiccation
sensitivity of seeds from further north is a consequence of a
relative reduction in the development period. The Greek seed
lot tested here had a higher level of desiccation tolerance than
previous seed lots of A. hippocastanum investigated (Tompsett
& Pritchard, 1993, 1998; Farrant & Walters, 1998), presumably
as a consequence of the seeds in these studies having devel-
oped in climates cooler than the natural range (i.e. Southern
England and Fort Collins, USA compared with Greece).
Therefore, in studies to determine a species’ desiccation toler-
ance it is essential to bear in mind the species’ native range. If
this is not the case, the observed level of desiccation tolerance
may reflect seed development under suboptimal conditions
rather than the maximum potential for that species. None-
theless, while it is comparatively easy to observe desiccation
tolerance lower than the maximum possible, it is difficult to
assess what a species’ maximum desiccation tolerance may be.
For example, it is not known whether seeds of A. hippocasta-
num that develop under warmer conditions than those exper-
ienced by the Greek seed lot would have an even greater level
of desiccation tolerance.
In support of the premise that environmental conditions
during seed development affect the level of seed desiccation
tolerance, there is uncertainty over the desiccation tolerance
of several species. Seeds of tea (Camellia sinensis) from South
Africa have been classified as recalcitrant (Berjak et al., 1993)
and seed lots from Japan and China as desiccation tolerant
(Amma & Watanabe, 1985; Hu et al., 1993). Neem (Azadiracta
indica) is native to the Indian subcontinent and has been
widely planted in Africa and there is debate over its level of
desiccation tolerance: seed lots have been classified as ortho-
dox, intermediate and recalcitrant (Poulsen, 1996; Sacandé,
2000). Similarly, provenance has been reported to have an effect
on desiccation tolerance of arabica coffee (Coffea arabica) seeds
(Ellis et al., 1991). Wild rice (Zizania palustris) seeds have
been classified as either desiccation intolerant (Probert &
Longley, 1989; Vertucci et al., 1995; Horne & Kahn, 2000)
or desiccation tolerant (Kovach & Bradford, 1992), although
the level of tolerance appears to be a function of the duration
of the seed development period (Vertucci et al., 1995). We
propose therefore, that the reported differences between seed
lots of these species may have resulted from seed lots develop-
ing under differing environmental conditions. This possibility
of ‘phenotypic recalcitrance’ requires further investigation,
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